Association study of the trinucleotide repeat polymorphism within SMARCA2 and schizophrenia

BMC Genet. 2006 Jun 3:7:34. doi: 10.1186/1471-2156-7-34.

Abstract

Background: Brahma (BRM) is a key component of the multisubunit SWI/SNF complex, a complex which uses the energy of ATP hydrolysis to remodel chromatin. BRM contains an N-terminal polyglutamine domain, encoded by a polymorphic trinucleotide (CAA/CAG) repeat, the only known polymorphism in the coding region of the gene (SMARCA2). We have examined the association of this polymorphism with schizophrenia in a family-based and case/control study. SMARCA2 was chosen as a candidate gene because of its specific role in developmental pathways, its high expression level in the brain and some evidence of its association with schizophrenia spectrum disorder from genome-wide linkage analysis.

Results: Family-based analysis with 281 complete and incomplete triads showed that there is no significant preferential transmission of any of the alleles to the affected offspring. Also, in the case/control analysis, similar allele and genotype distributions were observed between affected cases (n = 289) and unaffected controls (n = 273) in each of three Caucasian populations studied: French Canadian, Tunisian and other Caucasians of European origin.

Conclusion: Results from our family-based and case-control association study suggest that there is no association between the trinucleotide repeat polymorphism within SMARCA2 and schizophrenia.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Case-Control Studies
  • Genetic Markers
  • Humans
  • Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length*
  • Schizophrenia / genetics*
  • Transcription Factors / genetics*
  • Trinucleotide Repeats*

Substances

  • Genetic Markers
  • SMARCA2 protein, human
  • Transcription Factors